How RSU vs ESOP taxation in India
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How Restricted Stock Units vs Employee Stock Options taxation in India
Types of ESOPs & Related Stock-Based Incentives
Employee Stock Option Scheme (ESOS) : Employee Stock Option Plan allows employees the right (not obligation) to buy company shares at a predetermined price after a vesting period. Employees must decide whether to exercise based on the market price on the exercise date. Example: If the exercise price is INR 200 but the share trades at INR 400, exercising is beneficial. Most common form of ESOP. Employee gets the right (not obligation) to purchase company shares at a fixed exercise price after a vesting period. Employees must pay the exercise price to convert options into shares.
Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP) : Employees are allowed to buy company shares, often at a discount to Fair Market Value (FMV). Structure: Usually linked to public issues or periodic purchase programs. Employees acquire shares directly (ownership from day one), unlike ESOS which first grants “options.”
Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs) : Employees don’t receive shares but get cash (or shares) equal to the appreciation in stock price over a defined period. Example: If stock rises from ₹200 → ₹500, employee gets ₹300 per unit as benefit. Offers equity upside without downside risk.
Phantom Stocks : A deferred compensation plan where company credits employees with “phantom shares.” Value moves in line with company’s real share price, but no real ownership. Settlement: Paid out in cash (or sometimes stock) based on value at the end of the term. Mimics stock ownership benefits (value appreciation) without issuing real shares.
Restricted Stock Units (RSU) : Restricted Stock Units are company shares granted free of cost once vesting conditions (time, performance, or both) are met. Employees cannot sell until conditions are satisfied. Example: 3,000 RSUs vesting over 3 years → 1,000 shares per year. If the employee leaves early, unvested RSUs lapse. Employer grants shares for free after completion of vesting conditions (time-based, performance-based, or both). Ownership: Employee becomes shareholder only when conditions are met. No exercise price; safer than ESOS because there’s no out-of-pocket cost.
Employee Stock Options (ESOPs)- Taxation happens at two stages:
At Exercise (when option is exercised)
- Perquisite Tax under “Income from Salary.”
- Taxable Value = (Fair Market Value (FMV) on date of exercise – Exercise Price) × No. of shares exercised.
- Employer deducts TDS (tax at source) on this amount.
At Sale (when shares are sold)
- Capital Gains Tax under “Capital Gains.”
- Taxable Value = Sale Price – FMV on exercise date (already taxed as perquisite).
- Holding period:
- Listed Indian shares: LTCG if held >12 months; else STCG.
- Unlisted shares: LTCG if held >24 months; else STCG.
- Tax Rates:
- LTCG (listed): 10% (above INR 1 lakh, no indexation).
- STCG (listed): 15%.
- LTCG (unlisted): 20% with indexation.
- STCG (unlisted): Taxed as per slab.
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Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) : Taxation also happens at two stages:
At Vesting (when RSUs convert into shares)
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- RSUs are taxed as perquisite (salary income) on the FMV of shares on vesting date.
- Perquisite Value = FMV on vesting date × No. of shares vested.
- TDS deducted by employer.
At Sale (when vested shares are sold)
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- Capital Gains Tax applies.
- Taxable Value = Sale Price – FMV on vesting date (treated as cost of acquisition).
- Holding period rules & tax rates same as ESOPs.
Capital Gains Tax Rates (Post Budget 2024)
Shares | STCG | LTCG | Exemption | Indexation |
Listed | <12 months: 20% | ≥12 months: 12.5% | Exempt up to INR 1.25 lakh | No indexation |
Unlisted | <24 months: slab rate | ≥24 months: 20% | No exemption | No indexation (removed in Budget 2024) |
Comparison of RSU vs ESOP taxation in India
Particulars | ESOP (Employee Stock Option Plan) | RSU (Restricted Stock Unit) |
When benefit arises | On exercise (when employee buys shares at exercise price). | On vesting (when RSUs convert into shares, no payment required). |
Tax at Stage 1 | Perquisite Tax (Salary Income): (FMV on exercise date – Exercise Price) × No. of shares exercised. |
Perquisite Tax (Salary Income): FMV on vesting date × No. of shares vested. |
TDS Deduction | Employer deducts TDS on perquisite value at exercise. | Employer deducts TDS on perquisite value at vesting. |
Cost of Acquisition for Capital Gains | FMV on date of exercise. | FMV on date of vesting. |
When Capital Gains Arise | At sale of shares. | At sale of shares. |
Capital Gain Calculation | Sale Price – FMV on exercise date. | Sale Price – FMV on vesting date. |
Holding Period for LTCG | Listed shares: >12 months Unlisted shares: >24 months. |
Same as ESOPs. |
Capital Gains Tax Rates | Listed shares: STCG = 15% LTCG = 10% (above INR 1 lakh, no indexation)Unlisted shares: STCG = slab rate LTCG = 20% with indexation. |
Same as ESOPs. |
Employee Outflow | Needs to pay exercise price + tax on perquisite. | No exercise price, only tax on perquisite at vesting. |
Deferral Option (Start-ups only) | Eligible start-ups can defer perquisite tax up to 5 years / exit / IPO (whichever earlier). | No deferral option – tax always at vesting. |
Foreign ESOPs/RSUs | Tax rules same; foreign sale may also attract overseas tax, DTAA relief available. | Same treatment; mandatory reporting in ITR (Schedule FA). |
In short Quick Snapshot with Special Notes
- Start-ups (eligible under DPIIT): Perquisite tax on ESOPs can be deferred up to 5 years / till employee leaves / sale of shares / IPO — whichever earlier.
- Foreign RSUs/ESOPs: Taxation same, but at sale proceeds remitted abroad may attract foreign tax. Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) relief can be claimed in India.
- Disclosure: Foreign ESOP/RSU holdings and income must be disclosed in ITR (Schedule FA).
RSU vs ESOP taxation in India
- ESOPs : Perquisite tax at exercise + Capital Gains at sale. – (Tax at exercise (salary) + Tax at sale (capital gain))
- RSUs : Perquisite tax at vesting + Capital Gains at sale. – (Tax at vesting (salary) + Tax at sale (capital gain))
- Key Difference : ESOP requires employee to pay exercise price; RSU doesn’t.
Type | Employee Contribution | Ownership | Risk/Reward |
ESOS | Pay exercise price | Yes, after exercise | High risk, high reward |
ESPP | Buy at discount | Yes, immediate | Lower risk (buy at discount) |
RSU | No payment | Yes, after vesting | Safe, steady upside |
SAR | No payment | No, cash/stock benefit only | Only upside, no downside |
Phantom Stock | No payment | No (cash-settled) | Mimics stock gains, no ownership |
Bottom Line: RSU and ESOP taxation in India
- ESOP = High risk, high reward.
- RSU = Lower risk, steady benefit.
- For most employees, RSUs are a safer bet, while ESOPs suit those willing to take risks for potentially larger gains.
In practice Better RSU or ESOP
- Start-ups / growth companies : Prefer ESOS for retention + upside potential.
- Established companies : Use RSUs, SARs, or Phantom stock for steady and safer employee rewards.
Which is better, RSU or ESOP:
- RSU is safer: No cost, no risk of paying exercise price.
- ESOP is riskier but can offer higher upside if market price far exceeds exercise price.
- RSUs lose value only if company collapses; ESOPs can cause losses if stock underperforms.
- In practice, employees rarely get to choose — companies typically offer one or the other.